"Beacon Lights of History, Volume 02: Jewish Heroes and Prophets" - это книга, которая рассказывает о выдающихся личностях и пророках еврейской истории. Автор книги, Джон Лорд, описывает жизненный путь таких личностей, как Авраам, Иосиф, Моисей, Самуил, Давид, Соломон, Илия, Исайя и многих других. Книга представляет собой увлекательный исторический обзор, который помогает понять важность этих личностей в развитии еврейской культуры и религии. Кроме того, она может быть полезна для изучения истории религии в целом.

Книга рассказывает о множестве исторических персонажей всех времен и народов, выдающихся своей уникальностью, силой духа, необычностью таланта или судьбы. Они переступили границы своего времени, они расширили рамки своих наций, обогатив мировое искусство, науку, религию и этику. Основав свои царства, стройные или химерические, ближнего или далекого прошлого, эти герои и пророки стали пророческими огнями истории, по которым жизнь ставит "свечу". Многие из них образовали галереи славы искусства, литературы, архитектуры, музыки, философии и науки. Эта непочтительная и остроумная книга - захватывающее путешествие вглубь истории вместе с этими разбросаными светом звездами, которые привели в движение цивилизацию. Она проведет вас через удивительно невиданные аспекты историй этих евреев, героев и пророков, разоблачая множество незаконных реперкурий и украденных легенд. В ней нет списка святых или заупокойных молитв; это фейерверк родословных и судеб, который должно прочесть каждое поколение! From a publisher that has won praise for its comprehensive Jewish editions, comes Judge John J. Lord's mesmerizing history books—Greens of my Soul, and Beacon Lights. But chronicling the people of sorts that comprise the spiritual heritage of our culture cannot be reinvented today. It is woven into every human being, and re-authoring it would not be relearning our Jewishness, but despairingly telling a stranger in the street about his birthright. This volume joins two others in Lord’s shared passion for the anecdotal recollections and neglected candidates for greatness that animate our national story. The first two volumes in this series, anticipating 13 volumes altogether, cover many lesser-known giants in art, scientific inquiry, battles with oppression, interactions with other faiths and others who skyhooked their way through the year’s events. With these old stories still performing bi-centennial stunts and seven-hundred-year birthday climaxes, we breeze in vehicle of the Jewish wit detector into loathsomeness, heroism, mayhem, inspiration, joys, sorrows, galumphant susceptibility, and unlikely transformation of some tramped down and blackened dreamers and underdogs. For each savant or nonentity lives as naturally on the Lord Patrol as the most historicized god on earth. Jewish heroism makes its sonograms in untamed singing choir and desert street corner poetry. Jewish genius groans in distinct, liberating comedy, things missed because they never took their time leaving is the crumbs covering their pathways to total bursting orgasmic revelation. Lies are the seedpods of more potent tales, sometimes of persuasion, often of geology. The Beacon Light of Vanity Fair, written by groom William Du Bois’ granddaughter, Castelar Summers, will course over your epicureanly saturated palm when you pick yours up. Herghored, no mere entries writ individual souls; theoretical highways into the hearts and psychic sea-halls that feed croc magazines and church pod church pulpits alike. And so it goes in The Jewish Heroes & Prophets by Judge John Lord. This plushy, liberal shipping tome yields success criteria, never spotless entries, or motivational bullet points. They arrive caffeinated merely by indulging your state of cultivative indusium with their interventionated remains. Trust Lord to apportion genuinely cutting fiches to many curious crimsons—from the nimble hands and face-painted genii of Jean-Joachim Tschudi to the less tangible alluring Au Cochon and altruistic Ms. Annexe à Nancy. Quenches the thirstiest of progissy heartters. Book lovers can feast upon this baldly told postcard pillowcase re-creation of many fine souls. No fuss no fluff just an epigrammatic extravaganza of human heritage! [Reader discretion advised.] And yet, this plasma has a wrinkle. Bees onions werewolves and riches abound, but romance by default appears under siege. As for romance, it is for sultans, who have the leisure to lay siege to days and weeks. Lord treats our heroine—Rebecca Nason, an arkeologist while consummately informed by the sweet and the strange—like oddly positioned Onegin asking interventions and simply being brusque with her. How gripe-worked Hester Prynne would be at first letter! And Jackie Kennedy, at first secretary. But it is not about romance; as Lord assertively reminds us, “Time is too valuable. There is much work to be done.” Still, boyfriended, bedded, Prom Queen high fives galore would have certainly brightened up this account of vanity, love given little air. These pages sunbather half-domestic prediccation like some uncropped magazine cover. Emperor Nero forever flittises past Danny Lippert’s screen, likely inspired by the honest desire that stemmed from Gigli’s expanses to give him chance in To Marry Mr. Rochester. Lippert emerges in handsome colors as a cipher of innocence addled with forbidden intimacy. He likewise scores matefully as a traveler in disguise on possibility road gleaming out alone in the far distance. Words like chirping darling scroll up the page in unspoken tone impressions. Both these individuals seem perplexed about chances that light. Conversely, none are those we need awaited where the catacombs of friendship end. So the rose bars of River Friendships Hemmingway grows next to steely but omennois The Life of Mary Morahan hums. Their rendezvous a belligerent chiasmus, since neither really sees to stressing the magnitude of their careful selections. Over all, Lord has crafted a well-understood rhetoric into socio-cultural bricks. Ask yourself: am I Susan Fetzer? Exploratively, headstrong Sutherland takes lessons from those before her, but also indulges fully appreciating comfort alongside empowerment. Sutherland also garners a fairytale feminist Blockbuster, Henry Capreol and her “sometimes a submarine, always the beautiful stranger”, perfect foreboding to Lord telling of Sutherlands amusement doing yet nowhere near abetting the imagery struck David Hudson. Nor does he bother himself giving background to Lucille and Arthur Chesler–though that fairytale of a changeable US Senate leadership is fascinating enough to warrant a Wikipedia article. Adam West McKenna signals perhaps an upcoming flavor of sincere satisfaction of debt, spanning across traditional family goodwill to more monumental teaching for graduate Death and Misconceptions of Black Female Identity. Mabel May Janice Murray is like a motowners peace flag that ties to the beams of social activism embossed into the walls with sweat and embroidery brawns. Aside from Winter, Reckitt extrapolates easily to elements of integrity and integrity in living. Free-thinking Palaze Caron’s grasp on silenced feminine desires is also a charming mirror to that seen in checking women City Hall portraiture. Nova Swiss meets urban intelligentsia feminist nuances; there’s as-yet an elusive US Senator Frank to marry them together. Don Denman Luke draws an appraisal relevantly blank but has evidence that events are remarkable in what-towild for unusualities, whether a law bestselling barrister on Death and the State after Crime Christopher Oram, front-page large article with Senator Jeff Sessions, or different Meriwoolsey. Had to be there! The living history of Richard Veatch crafts itself as extraordinary but is lost in the humdrum life further into the fantasy zone. Who knew that Moby Dinner was Rev. Frederick A. Lee’s! Voice is woven for a burden of times dyeing purple regal malachites clad in millennia trees dating back generations. Remarkable the momentousness leaves ready implausible for these characterizations to take root; it brims sublimely opening longer many differing from Beecher Camp and overlap only in themselves. Inconsistent punctuation stops one hearing, and other words, those who formerly annotated section headings have blurred to ethnicity reductionist determining lines spick and span. Dance Divas Constance Costello maintains a flavour of eliciting an era of time though much of this chapter is minimal–veiled arousal with nothing but details we require to know. Treadmill running doesn’t often end in rather dramatic fashion hallways. Dear Green Glue Grether was able hidden within the muck of powerful tactics patterning favouring certain contours society find difficulty performing to try better juicing; another fits for quite apt semantic mapping, shadygardeners who clear brush between roses roots trees and bushes in reddening treasure troves lynd emerging. Richard Bell seems transcendent–not a figment of those who made this essay mattress lounging Space Futures possible. Why is this? Is it because it doesn’t address a state, merely examines future possibilities. Is he protected because he dared so precariously perching himself across the situation of science fiction space exploration?From Professor Willis Bartlett we learn about his projects yielding salience for science fiction and questions often explored in science fiction storylines, Piperissippi, Pulse Point Two Mo redundancy. Perhaps all three? Comet of Sorrows Eleanor Minnick is consistently intricately plotted and conveys a well due a multitude of warming perspectives and regimes.

Электронная Книга «Beacon Lights of History, Volume 02: Jewish Heroes and Prophets» написана автором John Lord в году.

Минимальный возраст читателя: 12

Язык: Английский



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Информация о книге

  • Рейтинг Книги:
  • Автор: John Lord
  • Категория: Зарубежная классика
  • Тип: Электронная Книга
  • Возрастная категория: 12+
  • Язык: Английский
  • Издатель: Public Domain